In a preceding article (J.H.S. vol. xxv, pp. 294–319) the attempt was made to fix chronologically the order in which the Olympian ‘treasuries’ were founded, and conclusions were summarily presented in connexion with a general consideration of the origin and function of ‘treasuries’ at Olympia and elsewhere. Now it is necessary to test these conclusions by a detailed examination of the architectural remains found on the terrace at Olympia, and in so doing to pass in review the successively founded Olympian communal houses called treasuries, taking them in the order thus theoretically arrived at, i.e. XII, X, XI, VII, VI, V, IX, IV, II, III, and I.
The Geloans' House, No. XII.—The foundations of this fabric were identified at the eastern verge of the terrace in 1877–78, in which year various parts of its superstructure came to light at the opposite corner of the Altis; but not till 1881–83 was this superstructure—entablature-stones of several kinds and fragments of terracotta (painted and unpainted) belonging to the treasury-chamber, as well as triglyphs, metopes, columns, and capitals belonging to the porch—completely recognised and convincingly distributed between the old treasury-chamber and the later porch.